Feeds:
Posts
Comments

I

The pain is like
The passing of your mother
In one slow leak
Over a lifetime
II

What does it mean to be 32?

To watch the devolution of your
Importance

To have mastered the masks of
Kindness
To attend better than a
Courtesan.
To listen and watch, make yourself
Empty
for a person – to tell yourself
it’s because
you see them come alive
Under a light

But really to do it because
No one has done it for you
And also
To hide
how much you resent that

III

I have hidden in branches
The light of the sun
Never enflamed me

I have watched the earth
Rotate
It’s magnum flecks
Pouring ice and hot bone

And I have considered the seasons
Spilling into each other
A sort of chaos, an uncomposed
Answer

And I have found
it means less
over time
IV

What does it mean to write poetry
when you are no longer 22?

When the grooves of common speech
dwell in you
almost as deep as the grooves of
common thought
and you can’t tell
anymore
just what was so revolutionary

-Nina Alvarez

A voice said, Look me in the stars
And tell me truly, men of earth,
If all the soul-and-body scars
Were not too much to pay for birth.

-Robert Frost

To see a solar eclipse
you must first be in
the path of totality.

The sun’s remaining rays
in deep valleys
around the moon.

-Nina Alvarez

The “Lyke-Wake Dirge” is a traditional English song that tells a Christian tale of the soul’s travel, and the hazards it faces, on its way from earth to Heaven.

The song is written in an old form of the Yorkshire dialect of Northern English. It goes:

THIS ae nighte, this ae nighte,
Every nighte and alle,
Fire and fleet and candle-lighte,
And Christe receive thy saule.

When thou from hence away art past
To Whinny-muir thou com’st at last

If ever thou gavest hosen and shoon,
Sit thee down and put them on;

If hosen and shoon thou ne’er gav’st nane
The whinnes sall prick thee to the bare bane.

From Whinny-muir when thou may’st pass,
To Brig o’ Dread thou com’st at last;

From Brig o’ Dread when thou may’st pass,
To Purgatory fire thou com’st at last;

If ever thou gavest meat or drink,
The fire sall never make thee shrink;

If meat or drink thou ne’er gav’st nane,
The fire will burn thee to the bare bane;

This ae nighte, this ae nighte,
—Every nighte and alle,
Fire and sleet and candle-lighte,
—And Christe receive thy saule.

Note: ae: one; hosen: stockings; shoon: shoes; whinnes: thorns; bane: bone; brig: bridge

1. Ithaca

2. I Walked a Mile with Pleasure

3. Ithaca (video)

4. After a While

5. Love Me Like You Never Loved Before

6. What You Should Know to be a Poet

7. Deathless Aphrodite of the Spangled Mind

8. The Serpent

9. The Lost Son

10. The Unicorn

On Snow

A Riddle

From Heaven I fall, though from earth I begin.
No lady alive can show such a skin.
I’m bright as an angel, and light as a feather,
But heavy and dark, when you squeeze me together.
Though candor and truth in my aspect I bear,
Yet many poor creatures I help to insnare.
Though so much of Heaven appears in my make,
The foulest impressions I easily take.
My parent and I produce one another,
The mother the daughter, the daughter the mother.

-James Parton

copped
his snake hair coils
beneath knit caps
and smoke stained
upper lips.

his knick-knack veins
pumping copper blood
in disregard
to my cold
caring eyes…

(follow my last
smoke filled
inhalation…
…and find me,
with your palms
pressed against flat
glass – let me count
your lifelines)

i want
to be sure
you outlive me.

Hannah Waterman (emerging poet from Western New York)

1

The irresponsive silence of the land,
The irresponsive sounding of the sea,
Speak both one message of one sense to me: —
Aloof, aloof, we stand aloof, so stand
Thou too aloof bound with the flawless band
Of inner solitude; we bind not thee;
But who from thy self—chain shall set thee free?
What heart shall touch thy heart? what hand thy hand?—
And I am sometimes proud and sometimes meek,
And sometimes I remember days of old
When fellowship seemed not so far to seek
And all the world and I seemed much less cold,
And at the rainbow’s foot lay surely gold,
And hope felt strong and life itself not weak.

2

Thus am I mine own prison. Everything
Around me free and sunny and at ease:
Or if in shadow, in a shade of trees
Which the sun kisses, where the gay birds sing
And where all winds make various murmuring;
Where bees are found, with honey for the bees;
Where sounds are music, and where silences
Are music of an unlike fashioning.
Then gaze I at the merrymaking crew,
And smile a moment and a moment sigh
Thinking: Why can I not rejoice with you ?
But soon I put the foolish fancy by:
I am not what I have nor what I do;
But what I was I am, I am even I.

3

Therefore myself is that one only thing
I hold to use or waste, to keep or give;
My sole possession every day I live,
And still mine own despite Time’s winnowing.
Ever mine own, while moons and seasons bring
From crudeness ripeness mellow and sanative;
Ever mine own, till Death shall ply his sieve;
And still mine own, when saints break grave and sing.
And this myself as king unto my King
I give, to Him Who gave Himself for me;
Who gives Himself to me, and bids me sing
A sweet new song of His redeemed set free;
He bids me sing: O death, where is thy sting?
And sing: O grave, where is thy victory?

-Christina Rossetti

The light the light as if there were but one

Falling in less than sphere direction yet

Slithering about the unseen modes formed

And forgotten on the windward side of

Prime so thankful to find us patient and

From the mouths of dreaming giants a cold

Black logic solid converse of shadow

Drips a torment not not sublime in its

Saccharine and relative spite torched as witch

Practice knows while shade defines edges bent

To purpose and teas brew adjacent on

Slabs called less than shrine as if there were but

Chairs to remedy this musical sort

Of lonely men standing left at games end

.

“of lonely men standing left at games end”

 

-Robert David Williams